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Average Number of Deficiencies per Certified Nursing Facility, 2007

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 Avg # of Nursing Home Deficiencies
United States7.5
Alabama6.7
Alaska7.2
Arizona8.0
Arkansas10.3
California12.2
Colorado11.1
Connecticut9.8
Delaware14.6
District of Columbia17.4
Florida8.5
Georgia6.7
Hawaii7.2
Idaho8.8
Illinois5.8
Indiana8.4
Iowa5.1
Kansas10.6
Kentucky5.1
Louisiana8.4
Maine10.3
Maryland10.8
Massachusetts5.8
Michigan9.2
Minnesota11.4
Mississippi4.7
Missouri8.9
Montana6.9
Nebraska6.8
Nevada8.3
New Hampshire4.4
New Jersey4.4
New Mexico8.4
New York5.9
North Carolina5.0
North Dakota4.3
Ohio5.7
Oklahoma9.6
Oregon5.0
Pennsylvania4.9
Rhode Island2.7
South Carolina7.8
South Dakota4.6
Tennessee5.7
Texas7.1
Utah6.0
Vermont8.1
Virginia7.6
Washington7.1
West Virginia9.0
Wisconsin4.9
Wyoming12.3
(show/hide notes)
Notes: 

Data are for calendar year 2007.
For full details about the data and data collection, please refer to the report, "Nursing, Facilities, Staffing, Residents, and Facility Deficiencies, 2001 Through 2007," cited below.

Sources: 

C. Harrington, H. Carrillo, and B. Blank. Table 33, "Nursing, Facilities, Staffing, Residents, and Facility Deficiencies, 2001 Through 2007," Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, accessed September 2008. Available at http://www.pascenter.org. Based on the Online Survey, Certification, and Reporting system (OSCAR), Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Definitions: 

Deficiency: Given to nursing facilities for problems which can result in a negative impact on the health and safety of residents.
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services define "actual harm" as a "deficiency that results in a negative outcome that has negatively affected the resident''s ability to achieve the individual''s highest functional status. "Immediate jeopardy" is defined as a deficiency that "has caused (or is likely to cause) serious injury, harm, impairment, or death to a resident receiving care in the nursing home."



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